real-time.

listen to the pronunciation of real-time.
English - Turkish
(Bilgisayar) gerçek zamanda
gerçek zamanlı

Casus uydular gerçek zamanlı olarak kamyonu takip etti. - Spy satellites tracked the truck in real time.

gerçek zaman
gerçek zaman

Casus uydular gerçek zamanlı olarak kamyonu takip etti. - Spy satellites tracked the truck in real time.

gerçek zaman(lı), eş zaman(lı)
RT
(Askeri) uzak terminal; engebeli arazi (remote terminal; rough terrain)
real time
(Askeri) GERÇEK ZAMAN: Bir olayın oluşu veya verilerin gönderimi ile olaylar hakkında bilgi veya diğer bir mevkide verilerin alınması arasında elektro-manyetik enerji ile çekim için gerekli zaman süresi hariç, gecikme olmaması. Ayrıca bakınız: "near real time"; "reporting time interval"
English - English
RT
The time duration required by a computer system to complete a particular task
alternative spelling of realtime
At the same time, simultaneously An event where two or more people communicate simultaneously, similar to the way people speak on a telephone at the same time This is in contrast to time-shifting, where one person leaves a message and the other person responds later
Communicating on the Internet at the same time or simultaneously, such as in chat rooms This is in contrast to time-shifting, where one person leaves a message and the other person responds later, such as in e-mail
as something happens, at the same time as when it happens
(1) (n ) An event or system that must receive a response to some stimulus within a narrow, predictable time frame, provided that the response is not strongly dependent on highly variable system-performance parameters, such as a processor load or interface latency (2) (n ) The accelerated graphics processing that makes objects appear to move naturally and at a realistic speed Also, the visual result of some combination of effective transformation algorithms, fine-tuning of the graphics software to the graphics hardware, and graphics accelerators
A real time program does all calculations while the current frame is being updated and manipulates a large amount of data They typically have large amounts of computations and have to be well organized and highly optimized An example would be a three dimensional simulator The opposite would be a word processor or spreadsheet, where all of the data is incrementally processed
(computer science) the time it takes for a process under computer control to occur
Occurring immediately The term is used to describe a number of different computer features For example, real-time operating systems are systems that respond to input immediately They are used for such tasks as navigation, in which the computer must react to a steady flow of new information without interruption Most general-purpose operating systems are not real-time because they can take a few seconds, or even minutes, to react
The actual timing of an event or process For example, if a video of an interview is displayed on the Web in 'real time', this is the actual length of time over which the interview was conducted
A real-time stock or bond quote is one that states a security's most recent offer to sell or bid (buy) Different from a delayed quote, which shows the same bid and ask prices 15 minutes and sometimes 20 minutes after a trade takes place
The actual passage of time Any event that occurs in real time indicates that the event is happening, as we would see it, in actual time Recording video in real time would require about 30 frames per second
Occurring at the same time as other, usually human, activities In real-time sequence recording, timing information is encoded along with the note data by analyzing the timing of the input In real-time editing, changes in parameter settings can be heard immediately, without the need to play a new note or wait for computational processes to be completed
{i} nickname for a calculation methodology whereby the computer arranges information quickly and reacts in a short period of time; actual time which passes during some act or operation
Time in which reporting on events or recording of events is simultaneous with the events
1 [techspeak] adj Describes an application which requires a program to respond to stimuli within some small upper limit of response time (typically milli- or microseconds) Process control at a chemical plant is the classic example Such applications often require special operating systems (because everything else must take a back seat to response time) and speed-tuned hardware 2 adv In jargon, refers to doing something while people are watching or waiting "I asked her how to find the calling procedure's program counter on the stack and she came up with an algorithm in real time "
If something is done in real time, there is no noticeable delay between the action and its effect or consequence. umpires, who have to make every decision in real time
the actual time that it takes a process to occur; "information is updated in real time"
A terms which refers to computer output in an immediate time frame In other words, up-to-date information is available without delay
When you and another user are linked at the same time, as with the "talk" function On the other hand, e-mail communication is delayed Reboot--Start up a computer again S
A transmission or data processing operational mode in which the data is entered in an interactive (two-way communicating) session; an application where response to input is fast enough to affect later data input
Refers to the utmost level of timeliness regarding the transmission, processing, and/or use of information A firm that collects and uses customer data in real time can manage relationships with individual customers much more effectively See also Zero Latency
(computer science) the time it takes for a process under computer control to occur the actual time that it takes a process to occur; "information is updated in real time
Real time is right now For instance, a live chat session happens in real time E-mail, on the other hand, does not Back to Top
A real time stock or bond quote is one that states a security's most recent offer to sell or bid (buy) A delayed quote shows the same bid and ask prices 15 minutes and sometimes 20 minutes after a trade takes place
Real time refers to immediate global navigation satellite data collection, processing and positioning in the field
A transmission or transaction that occurs immediately or in an extremely short period of time A telephone conversation occurs in real time; correspondence through mail does not
Events that happen in real time are happening virtually at that particular moment When you chat in a chat room, or send an instant message, you are interacting in real time since it is immediate
A form of information processing where output is generated nearly simultaneously with the corresponding input Used mostly where the results of the computation are used to influence a process while it is occurring
A real-time stock, bond, option or futures quote is one that reports the most current price available when a security changes hands A delayed quote shows a security's price 15 minutes and sometimes 20 minutes after a trade takes place
Time in which reporting of events or recording of events is simultaneous with the event
In reference to operating systems, a guarantee of a certain capability within a specified time constraint, thus permitting predictable, time-critical behavior If the user defines or initiates an event and the event occurs instantaneously, the computer is said to be operating in real time Real-time support is especially important for multimedia applications
The class of computations whose correctness depends not only on whether the result is the correct one, but also on the time at which the result is delivered Real-time applications are those that perform any real-time computations
Pertains to a data collecting system that controls an on-going process and delivers its outputs (or controls its inputs) not later than the time when these are needed for effective control
An on-line computer that generates output nearly simultaneously with the corresponding inputs Often, a computer system whose outputs follow its inputs by only a very short delay
Generally used to describe systems that must guarantee a response to an external event within a given time
Of or relating to a time frame that matches the human perception of time or the rate of an external process
is an operating system that responds to an external event within a short and predictable time frame
The description for a system that responds to an external event, unlike a batch or time-sharing system, within a short and predictable time frame
from Burns and Wellings (Burns & Wellings, 2001), ``any information processing activity or system which has to respond to externally generated input stimuli within a finite and specified delay '' in hard real-time systems, it is ``absolutely imperative that responses occur within the specified deadline'' in soft real-time systems, ``response times are important, but the system will still function correctly if deadlines are occasionally missed '' from the list of frequently asked questions for the comp realtime newsgroup, ``A real-time system is one in which the correctness of the computations not only depends upon the correctness of the computation but also upon the time at which the result is produced If the timing constraints of the system are not met, system failure is said to have occurred ''
Access to the telescope is controllable via a web browser across the internet; results are displayed on the screen as they are captured by the imaging camera This type of access requires a permanent, fast internet connection, and limits access to a single user at any given time
Without any of the delays associated with long distance transmission We speak of 'real-time' virtual experiences because they occur as they might do in reality, not slowed down nor speeded up, and responding to input instantaneously A 'real-time voice interface', therefore, might normally be called a 'conversation'
A communication exchange without any noticeable delays induced by the network Examples include phone calls, videoconferences, ideally, Web browsing RM cells (Resource Management cells) Management cells used to share congestion and flow control information in the ABR service category Router A computer that forwards packet through a network using information contained in the packet headers A router typically maintain routing tables which enable it to select the best outgoing link for forwarding the packet to the next router RS232 A data communication industry standard for the serial transmission of information Distance without modems is limted RS485 A data communication industry standard for the component transmission of information RSVP (Resource Reservation Tool) A draft IP standard that allows an application to request bandwidth and proritziation for real-time information flows
of or relating to computer systems that update information at the same rate they receive information
(Ticaret) The processing and visibility of transactions and information as they occur, and not on a periodic or batch basis
The characteristic of determinism applied to computer hardware and/or software A real-time process must perform a task in a determined length of time For example, a typical "normal" program may be considered to perform correctly if it behaves as expected and gives the right answer A real-time program is considered to be correct only if it gives the right answer within a specified deadline In other words, "real-time" adds a time constraint to the notion of a program being correct The phrase "real-time" does not directly relate to how fast the program responds, even though many people believe that real-time means real-fast This is a direct fall-out from the fact that it is easier to meet deadlines with a fast system However, many operating systems now run on powerful hardware and are "fast", but that speed does not necessarily imply "determinism" Determinism is more important than average speed for real-time systems
Describes an application which requires a program to respond to stimuli within a very small upper limit of response time (opposite: delayed)
In MIDI, there are two types of recording procedures: (1) real-time; (2) step-time The former resembles traditional recording--as with a tape recorder Step-time recording is really sequential: note-by-note, chord-by-chord
In a strict sense, real-time refers to applications that have a time critical nature Consider a data acquisition and control program for an automobile engine Assume that the data must be collected and processed once each revolution of the engine shaft This means that data must be read and processed before the shaft rotates another revolution, otherwise the sampling rate will be compromised and inaccurate calculations may result Contrast this with a program that prints payroll checks The speed at which computations are made has no bearing on the accuracy of the results Payroll checks will be generated with perfect results regardless of how long it takes to compute net pay and deductions See also hard real-time and softRealtime
The term "real-time" means to incur immediately For credit card processing, this means that the validity of a customer's credit card, as well as their available credit limit can be checked immediately before processing is accepted This is extremely important for card-present and Internet transactions, in which it is difficult and costly to get back in touch with the customer
Data is outputted as it is being read from the magnetic stripe, i e at a varying rate with manual readers; opposite of buffered
Refers to effects that take place as you listen, without a noticeable delay For example, when you move the sliders on Blaze Audio's WebEQ, the equalization changes as you move them
Input into a system that affects existing data immediately, as opposed to a batch-processed system that collects all data inputs and then processes them all at a later time This is a common buzzword that indicates that data can be accessed or edited immediately
Real-time processing is a type of computer programming or data processing in which the information received is processed by the computer almost immediately. real-time language translations. a real-time computer system deals with information as fast as it receives it
Immediate processing of input or notification of status
Instantaneous or very rapid response For example, stockbrokers require real-time market quotes, but casual investors may be satisfied with Yahoo's 15 minute delayed quotes
No lag time, no processing time The ability of a computer to process data so fast that the user perceives no delay between initiating a task and seeing the result
(broadcast usage) Actual time The moment in which the event is occurring, as opposed to "reel" time or clock time when the event is replayed from tape (See also: Backhaul, Live Origination)
real-time.

    Hyphenation

    re·al-time

    Videos

    ... Real time television transmission is not that good. ...
    ... Think for a moment about some of the real time ...
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